Bill Text: HI SR23 | 2019 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Urging The State Capitol Management Committee To Designate The Hawaii State Capitol Building And Its Grounds As A Single-use Plastic Free Zone.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Passed) 2019-04-12 - Report and Resolution Adopted, with Senator Fevella voting "Aye, with reservations". [SR23 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2019-SR23-Amended.html
THE SENATE |
S.R. NO. |
23 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2019 |
S.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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SENATE RESOLUTION
URGING THE STATE CAPITOL MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE TO DESIGNATE THE HAWAII STATE CAPITOL BUILDING AND ITS GROUNDS AS A SINGLE-USE PLASTIC FREE ZONE.
WHEREAS, over the past few decades, both locally and globally, there has been an exponential rise in the consumption of plastic items, including a six hundred ten percent increase in raw plastic production since 1975; and
WHEREAS, plastic packaging accounts for more than half of the plastic waste in the world and Americans are among the highest per capita users of plastic packaging; and
WHEREAS, only nine percent of plastic produced is recycled and twelve percent is incinerated, with the rest ending up in landfills or in the environment, with much of the improperly disposed plastic eventually ending up in the ocean; and
WHEREAS, an additional eight million metric tons of plastic end up in the ocean each year, contributing to plastic islands like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, the largest accumulation of ocean plastic in the world, which lies between Hawaii and California; and
WHEREAS, the production of plastic products contributes to climate change, and by 2050, is projected to account for twenty percent of global fossil fuel use; and
WHEREAS, single-use plastic products are especially detrimental to Hawaii's environment, flora, and fauna, as ninety-five percent of plastic packaging is discarded after its first single use, eighty percent of ocean plastic pollution enters the ocean from land, and countless marine animals, birds, and corals are harmed from the ingestion of and the suffocation from plastic pollution; and
WHEREAS, single-use plastic products also present an exacerbating threat to the economy, with single-use plastics being major contributors to street and beach litter and causing intangible damage to the State's tourist reputation, as well as millions of dollars in stormwater management and cleanup efforts; and
WHEREAS, the cost of plastic pollution on marine litter alone is estimated at $13,000,000,000 per year, which includes the impact on fisheries, tourism, and biodiversity; and
WHEREAS, the total social and environmental costs are pegged at a staggering $139,000,000,000, which includes costs from the impact on climate change, health, crops, the environment, and the cost of waste disposal; and
WHEREAS, a growing body of scientific literature has identified potential human health hazards from plastics, including that the incineration of plastic releases harmful dioxins that may be released into ambient air; single-use plastics like polystyrene and single-use plastic bottles may leach endocrine-disrupting and potentially carcinogenic chemicals with re-use; and microplastics may be ingested by marine animals and bioaccumulate and biomagnify up the food chain, bringing toxic chemicals into food sources; and
WHEREAS, feasible alternatives to plastics exist at cost-competitive levels; Hawaii has pledged its support for the Aloha+ Challenge, one of the pillars of which is solid waste reduction; and the Legislature has introduced multiple bills that aim to curb or eliminate plastic waste; now, therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the Thirtieth Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2019, that the State Capitol Management Committee is urged to designate the Hawaii State Capitol building and its grounds as a single-use plastic free zone; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED
that certified copies of this Resolution be transmitted to the President of the
Senate, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Chairperson of the State
Capitol Management Committee.
Urging the State Capitol Management Committee to Designate the Hawaii State Capitol Building and its Grounds as a Single-use Plastic Free Zone